Because of the near-secret nature of lawmakers’ internal email addresses, the emails have raised more than a few eyebrows — and the possibility that one of their own was behind, or at least assisting in the attacks.

* * *

“It’s got to be another member. Probably one of the crazy ones,” said a Republican who had seen the email, which was sent from an anonymous email address, unrepresentative1@gmx.com.

Wait, "one of the crazy ones"? That doesn't narrow things down at all!

In the email, the lawmakers received a set of forwarded emails sent by “unrepresentative one” to Oklahoma Rep. James Lankford and Speaker John Boehner. The apparent message to GOP House members: If you vote for a debt-limit increase, an outside group mentioned in the email will mobilize against you.

In the forwarded email to Boehner, the writer professes his previous loyalty to the House leader before accusing the Ohio Republican of lying. “John, I’ve never voted against you. Nor have I ever not done whatever you asked of me, nor am I one of the second-guessers who thinks you have an easy job. But, isn’t it time we stopped lying to the American People in re the debt limit?” the email says.

The bizarrely constructed email also contains a cryptic back-and-forth between “unrepresentative one” and a shadowy third party — exposethefrauds@aim.com — who demands “High discretion required on attached - no ID on this or source $. Your colleagues merit everything planned. No idea how you can stand it, but yes, you are exempt.”

The email includes several attachments, including a list of “targeted debt hikers” who voted for previous debt increases and a spreadsheet of Lankford’s donors.

A Boehner spokesman declined to comment, and emails to “unrepresentative one” and exposethefrauds were not returned.

That the messages went to members’ internal House emails suggests a member or high-level staffer either wrote them or provided the emails to an outside person to use.

“It’s very, very difficult to get those emails,” a former leadership aide said, saying that even for a member of Congress it would take work to compile a comprehensive list of members, noting that it’s much easier to find, for instance, Lankford’s personal, non-congressional email than his internal congressional address.

Lankford, however, downplayed the chances that one of his colleagues sent the strange missive.

“It reads too weird to be that. Some of the statements, some of the stuff in it … at one point in one of the original emails they call me Jim. No one calls me Jim. I go by James. There’s one addressed to the speaker and it’s starts off to ‘John.’ Nobody calls the speaker ‘John,’” Lankford told BuzzFeed Tuesday afternoon.

“So it looks like something someone has created on the outside that wants to pretend they look like us. Because I keep looking at and reading it and thinking nobody even reads or writes like this. And it’s just too weird,” he added.

Because of the near-secret nature of lawmakers’ internal email addresses, the emails have raised more than a few eyebrows — and the possibility that one of their own was behind, or at least assisting in the attacks.

* * *

“It’s got to be another member. Probably one of the crazy ones,” said a Republican who had seen the email, which was sent from an anonymous email address, unrepresentative1@gmx.com.

Wait, "one of the crazy ones"? That doesn't narrow things down at all!

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